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My question is meant to be serious, so I would like serious answers, please. I'll start you off with 'when all is said and done', and 'at this point in time'.

Cheers.

2007-01-07 15:13:03 · 4 answers · asked by Marion111 3 in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

4 answers

In common English using the term "basically" and "for all intents and purposes" (also wrongly "all intensive purposes"). In the business world the terms "proactive", "synergy", or "tipping point" make me want to shove a pencil through my ear!

2007-01-08 11:45:35 · answer #1 · answered by LanceMiller77 2 · 0 0

Prolly the ones about Ben Ladin being the troops and the whole darfting thing

2007-01-07 23:23:29 · answer #2 · answered by Praiser in the storm 5 · 0 0

Mine's "loves, losts, trials and tribulations". It always creeps me out. It should be banned. Any writer who uses this should be ran after with a pitchchfork.

2007-01-07 23:29:46 · answer #3 · answered by Mr. man about slum 2 · 0 0

"at the end of the day..."
"sorry about that"

2007-01-08 03:25:36 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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